Abstract
AbstractThe molecular mechanisms underlying diversity in animal behavior are not well understood. A major experimental challenge is determining the contribution of genetic variants that affect neuronal gene expression to differences in behavioral traits. The neuroendocrine TGF-beta ligand, DAF-7, regulates diverse behavioral responses ofCaenorhabditis elegansto bacterial food and pathogens. The dynamic neuron-specific expression ofdaf-7is modulated by environmental and endogenous bacteria-derived cues. Here, we investigated natural variation in the expression ofdaf-7from the ASJ pair of chemosensory neurons and identified common variants ingap-2, encoding a GTPase-Activating Protein homologous to mammalian SynGAP proteins, which modifydaf-7expression cell-non-autonomously and promote exploratory foraging behavior in a DAF-7-dependent manner. Our data connect natural variation in neuron-specific gene expression to differences in behavior and suggest that genetic variation in neuroendocrine signaling pathways mediating host-microbe interactions may give rise to diversity in animal behavior.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory